şŁ˝ÇÖ±˛Ą

The UN mission appeals to the Taliban to restore Internet access across Afghanistan

The UN mission appeals to the Taliban to restore Internet access across Afghanistan
Short Url
Updated 1 min 32 sec ago

The UN mission appeals to the Taliban to restore Internet access across Afghanistan

The UN mission appeals to the Taliban to restore Internet access across Afghanistan

ISLAMABAD: The United Nations mission in Afghanistan urged the Taliban on Tuesday to restore Internet and telecommunications access across the country, saying the blackout imposed by the government in Kabul has left the nation almost entirely cut off from the outside world.
The outage, reported the previous day, was the first nationwide shutdown since the Taliban returned to power in August 2021 and was part of their professed crackdown on immorality. Earlier this month, several provinces lost their fiber-optic connections after Taliban leader Hibatullah Akhundzada issued a decree banning the service to prevent immorality.
The disruption threatened economic stability and deepened one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises, said the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan.
It warned that the blackout is crippling banking and financial systems, isolating women and girls, limiting access to medical care and remittances, and disrupting aviation.
The UN said such restrictions further undermine freedom of expression and the right to information. It noted that telecommunications are also crucial during disasters — Afghanistan has recently suffered major earthquakes in the east and is struggling with mass forced returns from neighboring countries.
The UN mission said the Internet outage spread since it was first imposed by the Taliban on Sept. 16 and became nationwide on Sept. 29. The mission said it would continue to press Afghanistan’s de facto authorities to restore access “in support of the Afghan people.”


Ukrainian diver wanted over Nord Stream explosions detained in Poland

Ukrainian diver wanted over Nord Stream explosions detained in Poland
Updated 20 sec ago

Ukrainian diver wanted over Nord Stream explosions detained in Poland

Ukrainian diver wanted over Nord Stream explosions detained in Poland
  • The Nord Stream explosions in 2022 largely severed Russian gas supplies to Europe
  • Private broadcaster RMF FM said Volodymyr Z. was detained in Pruszkow, west of Warsaw
WARSAW: Volodymyr Z., a Ukrainian diver wanted by Germany over his alleged involvement in the Nord Stream explosions, has been detained in Poland, his lawyer said on Tuesday.
Described by both Moscow and the West as an act of sabotage, the explosions in 2022 largely severed Russian gas supplies to Europe, marking a major escalation in the Ukraine conflict and squeezing energy supplies on the continent.
No one has taken responsibility for the blasts and Ukraine has denied any role.
“This morning, he was detained in a town near Warsaw,” Volodymyr Z.’s lawyer Tymoteusz Paprocki said.
Private broadcaster RMF FM first reported the arrest. It said Volodymyr Z. was detained in Pruszkow, west of the capital.
Suspect to fight transfer to Germany
Paprocki said that Volodymyr Z.’s defense would fight against his transfer to Germany, arguing that the execution of the European arrest warrant against him was inadmissible given Russia’s war in Ukraine.
“The attack on Nord Stream infrastructure concerns one of the pipeline’s owners, Gazprom, which directly finances the military operations in Ukraine,” he said.
Gazprom is Russia’s state gas giant.
The German justice ministry and the federal prosecutor’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Reuters. Polish prosecutors had no immediate comment.
In August, Italian police arrested a Ukrainian man suspected of coordinating the attacks.
The man, identified only as Serhii K., plans to take his fight against extradition to Italy’s highest court after a lower court ordered his transfer to Germany.
Polish prosecutors said in August that they received a European arrest warrant issued by Berlin in connection with the attack on Nord Stream pipelines, but the suspect had already left Poland.
Gas pipelines
German investigators believe Volodymyr Z. was part of a team that planted the explosives, the SZ and Die Zeit newspapers reported in August alongside the ARD broadcaster, citing unnamed sources.
The blasts wrecked three out of four Nord Stream pipelines, which had become a controversial symbol of German reliance on Russian gas in the wake of Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.
Russia blamed the US, Britain and Ukraine for the blasts, which largely cut Russian gas off from the lucrative European market. Those countries have denied involvement.
Germany, Denmark, and Sweden all opened investigations into the incident, and the Swedes found traces of explosives on several objects recovered from the explosion site, confirming the blasts were deliberate acts.
The Swedish and Danish investigations were closed in February without identifying any suspect.

Spain to probe firms tied to occupied Palestinian territories

Spain to probe firms tied to occupied Palestinian territories
Updated 30 September 2025

Spain to probe firms tied to occupied Palestinian territories

Spain to probe firms tied to occupied Palestinian territories
  • The UN has released an update of its database of companies with activities in Israeli settlements in Palestinian territories
  • Spain is one of the most vocal critics in Europe of Israel’s military offensive in Gaza

MADRID: Spain’s leftist government said Tuesday it will investigate companies that advertise products or services in the country that originate in the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories.
The measure follows the approval of a decree last week that bans the promotion of such goods and services in Spain to prevent firms from benefiting from the occupation, the consumer ministry said in a statement.
The decree is part of a package of measures that includes an arms embargo on Israel aimed at halting what Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez called “the genocide in Gaza.”
Consumer Affairs Minister Pablo Bustinduy said earlier this year his office would use “all necessary resources” to ensure no company operating in Spain profits from the occupation.
“No firm should have its balance sheet stained with the blood of the Palestinian people,” the statement quoted him as saying at an event in July.
The United Nations on Friday released an update of its database of companies with activities in Israeli settlements in Palestinian territories, listing 158 firms from 11 nations.
But one of the Spanish firms cited, builder ACS, swiftly requested to be removed from the list, saying it had in 2021 sold its subsidiary, SEMI, that operates in Israel.
“ACS does not carry out any activity in Israel or in the Israeli settlements,” the company, led by Real Madrid president Florentino Perez, said in a statement.
Most of the international community considers Israeli settlements in the West Bank illegal under international law, although most are considered legal by Israel.
Some so-called “outposts” are illegal, but often tolerated and sometimes later legalized.
Spain is one of the most vocal critics in Europe of Israel’s military offensive in Gaza, which was launched in response to the October 7, 2023 attacks by Palestinian Islamist group Hamas.


States to end nutrition education programs after Trump cuts

States to end nutrition education programs after Trump cuts
Updated 30 September 2025

States to end nutrition education programs after Trump cuts

States to end nutrition education programs after Trump cuts
  • The program was eliminated by Trump’s spending bill, effective September 30
  • Schools, food banks and other organizations are rushing to wind down nutrition and health programming once funded by the US Department of Agriculture’s Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Education

WASHINGTON: On a warm September day in the courtyard of a San Francisco senior living community, a dozen residents shake their hips and throw their hands in the air to the beat of, fittingly, Earth, Wind & Fire’s “September.”
Their hour-long dance class is hosted by Leah’s Pantry, a nonprofit that has run nutrition and health programs around the city since 2006. For Kengsoi Chou Lei, a 72-year-old retiree who came to the US from Macau in 1995, attending the weekly class has taught her that “exercise makes you healthier, more relaxed and happier overall,” she said in Cantonese through an interpreter.
The organization’s class schedule will soon shrink as Leah’s Pantry faces a 90 percent funding loss from federal cuts passed in July as part of President Donald Trump’s tax-cut and spending bill.
Schools, food banks and other organizations are rushing to wind down nutrition and health programming once funded by the US Department of Agriculture’s Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Education, known as SNAP-Ed, according to eight state officials and nonprofit organizations interviewed by Reuters.
The program was eliminated by Trump’s spending bill, effective September 30.
“It’s definitely like a catastrophic situation for public health nutrition,” said Leah’s Pantry founder and executive director Adrienne Markworth.
The cuts represent the first wave of reductions from the bill to federal nutrition programs, which also hiked work requirements for aid recipients and will eventually force significant nutrition spending onto states.
Republican lawmakers that passed the bill argued SNAP-Ed is ineffective and redundant, claims program supporters reject. The USDA did not respond to a request for comment.

CUT PROGRAM SUPPORTED MAHA GOALS
Since 1992, the USDA has spent more than $9 billion on SNAP-Ed, agency data shows. Land-grant universities and public health departments typically funnel the federal dollars to organizations serving low-income communities with programs like cooking classes and school gardens.
SNAP-Ed sessions drew more than 1.8 million people in 2022, according to the USDA. Grantees say the program supported the goals of the Trump administration’s Make America Healthy Again Commission, led by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., which Trump charged with addressing childhood chronic disease.
Lisa Kingery, CEO of the Milwaukee nonprofit organization FoodRight, which is primarily funded by SNAP-Ed, said her classes have taught more than 1,200 public school students annually to identify and cook fresh foods, which in turn has led to better family diets.
“When we cut SNAP-Ed, we’re cutting kids off from the skills they need to be healthy,” Kingery said.
The Department of Health and Human Services referred Reuters to the USDA for questions about whether cutting SNAP-Ed contradicts the administration’s MAHA goals.
Some states will end all SNAP-Ed programs after September 30. Others will stretch funds and use leftover money from 2025 to maintain a reduced schedule for the next few months while they wind down operations, state officials and organizations said.
The House Agriculture Committee in its May proposal to cut SNAP-Ed as part of the tax-cut bill pointed to a 2019 Government Accountability Office report that found gaps in how the USDA coordinated and assessed its nutrition program.
But the USDA addressed many of those concerns in recent years, said Chris Mornick, SNAP-Ed Program Manager with the Washington State Department of Social and Health Services and a leader of the Association of SNAP Nutrition Education Administrators.
It is also by far the biggest federal nutrition education program, said Cindy Long, national adviser at professional services firm Manatt and former deputy undersecretary for nutrition programs at the USDA.
“SNAP-Ed efforts were evidence-based,” Long said, “and the idea that they were duplicative doesn’t really hold up.”


German police arrest Syrian man suspected of crimes against humanity

German police arrest Syrian man suspected of crimes against humanity
Updated 30 September 2025

German police arrest Syrian man suspected of crimes against humanity

German police arrest Syrian man suspected of crimes against humanity
  • Some protesters were handed over to police and intelligence authorities and, while detained, subjected to severe abuse, said the prosecutors, adding in once case, a protester died

BERLIN: German police arrested on Tuesday a Syrian man suspected of committing crimes against humanity, including killing and torturing, as a militia leader in 2011 in Aleppo, prosecutors said.
The Syrian national, identified only as Anwar S. in line with German privacy laws, is suspected of being head of the “shabiha militia” deployed in Aleppo on behalf of the former Syrian leadership under then-President Bashar Assad.
Prosecutors said that on eight occasions between April and November 2011 after Friday prayers, the suspect and his militia hit civilians with batons, metal pipes and other tools to disperse protests. Electric shocks were also believed to have been used, they added in a statement.
Some protesters were handed over to police and intelligence authorities and, while detained, subjected to severe abuse, said the prosecutors, adding in once case, a protester died.
Reuters was not immediately able to contact Anwar S.’s lawyer for comment.
Germany has targeted several former Syrian officials in the last few years under universal jurisdiction laws that allow prosecutors to seek trials for suspects in crimes against humanity committed anywhere in the world.


Car bomb outside Pakistani security force headquarters kills 8

Car bomb outside Pakistani security force headquarters kills 8
Updated 30 September 2025

Car bomb outside Pakistani security force headquarters kills 8

Car bomb outside Pakistani security force headquarters kills 8
  • Residents said the blast was so powerful it was heard from miles away

QUETTA: Militants set off a powerful car bomb outside the headquarters of Pakistan’s paramilitary security forces in the southwestern city of Quetta on Tuesday, killing at least eight people and wounding several others, authorities said.
Before detonating their vehicle, four attackers who were inside the car stepped outside and engaged the troops in an intense shootout, according to the police.
Residents said the blast was so powerful it was heard from miles away. Ambulances rushed to the site in front of the Frontier Constabulary and rescuers transported the wounded to nearby hospitals.
No group immediately claimed responsibility, though suspicion is likely to fall on separatist groups that often target civilians and security forces in insurgency-plagued Balochistan, where Quetta is the provincial capital.
According to provincial health minister Bakhat Kakar there were concerns the death toll could rise further.
Local television channels and CCTV footage from the site of the explosion shows a car stopping in front of the gate of the paramilitary compound. An explosion follows and gunfire is heard after the blast. Windows of surrounding buildings were shattered and nearby cars were also damaged, according to the footage.
Balochistan Chief Minister Sarfraz Bugti condemned the attack, saying security forces returned fire and killed all four assailants.
“Terrorists cannot break the nation’s resolve through cowardly acts, and the sacrifices of our people and security forces will not go in vain,” Bugti said in a statement. He said that his government remains committed to making the province a peaceful and secure place.
The latest attack came weeks after a suicide bomber blew himself up outside a stadium near Quetta as supporters of a nationalist party were leaving a rally, killing at least 13 people and wounding 30 others.
Balochistan has long been the scene of insurgency, with groups such as the outlawed Baloch Liberation Army demanding independence from the central government. The separatists have largely targeted security forces and civilians in the region and elsewhere.